I can't seem to spot a method to edit my post, so, apologies for the double-post...

Just throwing it out there for others who may be having issues with the keyboard locking out and looking in here to get added support.

This thread got me up and running perfectly with my FN keys working and the keyboard no longer locks itself up.

I was going to also ask if there was definitely 10.10 support, but I guess that since everything else is running perfectly fine for me, then it must be supported. (I think I am using the most up to date kernel as well, but not 100% certain, as I don't know what I am looking for when I run uname -a to confirm)

although my understanding is that the new udev package should take care of it.

FN controls now work somehow (FN-F1 sleeps, but does not wake up with wireless; FN-F11 and FN-F12 do not seem to do anything visible, xev return false). Wireless almost always detected but rarely able to connect, and FN key does not release, to my surprise even after a complete Ubuntu install.

I am wondering what went wrong, and if there is a way to make Wifi work and FN release.

This is about the slowest message I have ever written The none-edited version is something closer to this:

I am wondering what went wrong, and if there is a way to make Wifi work and FN release.

Alright, now that I figured what FN-F11 actually does (ahem), the only thing that's left not-working is WiFi. I have installed samsung-wireless, can detect wireless, but cannot make a successful connection most of the time. Other devices connect to same WiFi network easily.

I am wondering what went wrong, and if there is a way to make Wifi work and FN release.

Alright, now that I figured what FN-F11 actually does (ahem), the only thing that's left not-working is WiFi. I have installed samsung-wireless, can detect wireless, but cannot make a successful connection most of the time. Other devices connect to same WiFi network easily.

Sorry if correct Ubuntu terminology is not used here, but am very new to the OS (less than 36 hours). I too have got a N210 now with Ubuntu 10.10 installed, and have followed amerog's post with the same degree of success and failure - ie wireless doesn't work.

After some playing and googling, it is now working.

On the desktop, I clicked the top left Ubuntu icon, and on the screen that opened, clicked the "Get New Apps" icon.On the new screen that opens, I expanded the "Installed Software" node, and then selected the "PPA for Samsung Netbooks" node.On the right pane, I discovered that there were two wireless "applications", one labelled "samsung-wireless" and the other labelled "samsung-wireless-2.6.35-22"

Did that, machine started to negotiate the connection to the wireless network, asked for the WEP key, which I entered, and it connected, and has stayed connected.

Again, sorry if this is not the "approved" way of doing things in Ubuntu, but despite that, it has worked here, and I now have what appears to be a stable wireless connection

Thanks hawkeye9322 for tracing this with me. It seems that the problem has to do with WPA only. WEP and open networks have no trouble here too, except WEP is quite easy to crack, so it is useless to use anyway. Open is a good idea if have an unlimited bandwidth or can support your neighbour. I wish I could, but I also want to use this laptop in all situations, including when I am in a place with WPA.

I am guessing samsung-wireless is a 'generic' package that only points to the most recent version of Voria's kernel. No, Voria?

Did that, machine started to negotiate the connection to the wireless network, asked for the WEP key, which I entered, and it connected, and has stayed connected.

Again, sorry if this is not the "approved" way of doing things in Ubuntu, but despite that, it has worked here, and I now have what appears to be a stable wireless connection

Thanks hawkeye9322 for tracing this with me. It seems that the problem has to do with WPA only. WEP and open networks have no trouble here too, except WEP is quite easy to crack, so it is useless to use anyway. Open is a good idea if have an unlimited bandwidth or can support your neighbour. I wish I could, but I also want to use this laptop in all situations, including when I am in a place with WPA.

I am guessing samsung-wireless is a 'generic' package that only points to the most recent version of Voria's kernel. No, Voria?

Aagh. Apologies. Ignore the bit about WEP key. I should have said WPA/WPA2.

I have the same problem as the above posters with the Realtek 8192e on my Samsung N220. The hardware between our netbooks is pretty much the same, so I don't imagine there's much of a difference with our problems.

I've found a sloppy way to fix the problem, which is to manually unload/reload the network card's driver via modprobe. The following commands do that:

Code:

sudo modprobe -r r8192e_pcisudo modprobe r8192e_pci

I find that after pasting these commands (sans sudo) into /etc/rc.local I can connect to my network within seconds of logging in. A bit of a messy fix, but it seems to work.

On another note, I just installed the newest driver to pop up in the repository; I'll post if it seems to be any better than the older ones.

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